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Biretta

The biretta (Latin: biretum, birretum) is a square cap with three or four peaks or horns, sometimes surmounted by a tuft. Traditionally the three-peaked biretta is worn by Catholic clergy and some Anglican and Lutheran clergy. A four-peaked biretta is worn as academic dress (but not liturgically) by those holding a doctoral degree from a pontifical faculty or pontifical university or faculty. Occasionally the biretta is worn by advocates in law courts, for instance the advocates in the Channel Islands.[1]

A traditional black biretta

Origins

 
The "Spanish version" of the biretta, from the Philippi Collection

The origins of the biretta are uncertain. It is mentioned as early as the tenth century. One possible origin is the academic cap of the high Middle Ages, which was soft and square. This is also the ancestor of the modern mortarboard used today in secular universities. The biretta seems to have become a more widely used as an ecclesiastical vestment after the synod of Bergamo, 1311, ordered the clergy to wear the "bireta on their heads after the manner of laymen."[2] The tuft or pom sometimes seen on the biretta was added later; the earliest forms of the biretta (the cap) did not bear the device.

Liturgical biretta

Catholic use

The biretta may be used by all ranks of the Latin Church clergy, including cardinals and other bishops to priests, deacons, and even seminarians (who are not clergy, since they are not ordained). Those worn by cardinals are scarlet red and made of silk. After the Second Vatican Council the ceremony of giving the galero to cardinals was replaced with giving the biretta. The biretta of a bishop is amaranth in color, while those worn by priests, deacons, and seminarians are black. The pope does not make use of the biretta.

The Tridentine Roman Missal rubrics on low Mass require the priest to wear the biretta while proceeding to the altar, to hand it to the server on arrival and to resume it when leaving.[3] At solemn Mass the sacred ministers wear it also when seated.[4]

Appearance

Cardinals bear no tuft or "pom" (they are given their birettas and zucchettos by the Pope who elevated them in a ceremony named a consistory – they will form a line, and kneel before him when receiving them), bishops bear a purple pom, priests who have been appointed as prelates to certain positions within the Vatican wear a black biretta with red pom, diocesan priests and deacons wear a black biretta with or without a black pom. It is often asserted that seminarians are only entitled to wear a biretta without a pom-pom, but there would seem to be no formal ruling on this point. Priests in monastic and mendicant religious orders that have their own habits (Benedictines, Franciscans, Dominicans, etc.) do not generally wear birettas: in most circumstances, even liturgical, the monastic hood took the place of the biretta. Canons Regular generally do—for instance the canons of the Order of Prémontré wear a white biretta. Clerks Regular (that is, post-Renaissance religious orders primarily dedicated to priestly ministry, for instance the Jesuits and Redemptorists) generally wear a black biretta with no tuft. Other priests who belong to various forms of community life, as the Congregation of the Oratory of St. Philip Neri for instance, generally also wear birettas, but without a pom. The Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest uses black birettas with a blue pom.

The liturgical biretta has three peaks (four peaks however are the norm in Germany and the Netherlands), with the "peak-less" corner worn on the left side of the head. According to the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia, "It was formerly the rule that a priest should always wear it in giving absolution in confession, and it is probable that the ancient usage which requires an English judge assume the 'black cap' in pronouncing sentence of death is of identical origin."[5]

The use of the biretta has not been abolished as a result of changes in the regulation of clerical dress and vesture following the Second Vatican Council and still remains the correct liturgical headgear for those in Holy Orders whilst "in choir", but its use has been made optional. Its use is prevalent among bishops and cardinals, and less so among other clergy. Some priests wear it during outdoor services such as burials or processions and, as is intended, during the celebration of Mass and other liturgical services. The biretta is also worn by a priest, deacon, subdeacon, and bishop in attendance at a Mass offered according to the rubrics for the Roman Missal of 1962.

Use by Anglicans

Birettas are also occasionally worn by Anglo-Catholic Anglican clergy, though it is generally considered a Romanism. Canons and deans could wear a black biretta with a red pom.

The Canterbury cap, which like the biretta, evolved from the medieval cap, although seldom used since the early 20th century, has been considered a more authentically Anglican alternative to the biretta. The Canterbury cap has a soft, square top rather than the rigid horns that developed on the biretta.

Academic biretta

 
Spanish rector (college president) in full academic dress, wearing the round birrete (biretta) that is the academic cap in Spanish universities.

Doctoral degrees

Use in medieval universities

In the medieval university, the ceremony by which a new master or doctor received his degree included the birretatio, or imposition of the biretta. This was often given with a token book in recognition of the person's scholarship.[6] The academic biretta developed into various styles of academic headgear on the European continent and in the British Isles. Today some secular universities still use the term, if not the actual biretta, to name their academic cap.

Use by pontifical universities

For those holding doctoral degrees from a pontifical university or faculty, whether ordained or lay, "the principal mark of a Doctor's dignity is the four horned biretta."[7] In commencement ceremonies and other academic settings, doctors of the four ecclesiastical disciplines (Philosophy, Theology, Canon Law, and Sacred Scriptures) from pontifical faculties and universities have a canonical right to wear the doctoral biretta as stated in the Codex Iuris Canonici, 1917, can. 1378, and explained in commentary 262 of the Commentarium Codicis Iuris Canonici as follows:

"262. Doctoratus ac Scentiae effectus canonici sic recensentur can. 1378...doctoribus seu gradum academicum in una ex quatuor supradictis facultatibus <<vide 261: philosophia, theologia, ius canonicum, Sacra Scriptura>> supremum obtinentibus, rite creatis, seu promotis regulariter post examen, iuxta "statuta a Sede Apostolica probata" (can. 1376, § 2) saltem quoad usum validum "facultatis ab eadem Aplca. Sede concessae" (can. 1377, § 1), deferendi, extra sacras functiones, (quarum nomine ad hunc eflectum non-venit ex usu sacra praedicatio), nisi aliunde amplietur eis hoc ius quoad a) annulum etiam cum gemma "ipsis a iure huius canonis concessum" (can. 136, § 2), b) et biretum doctorale, (idest: cum quatuor apicibus) utpote insigne huius gradus ac diverso colore ornatum pro Facultate.:[8]

The sections concerning the 1917 edition of Canon Law in relation to the academic biretta were abrogated by the updated edition in the 1983 Code of Canon Law. Nevertheless, the use of the academic biretta has continued to this day despite official recognition in the 1983 Code on the grounds that the new code did not intend to suppress its use but simply to divest itself of concern for academic regalia. Moreover, as it became socially acceptable for Catholic priests to study for post-ordination degrees at Protestant seminaries or secular universities, the four horned academic biretta with appropriately colored piping has similarly been employed by such priests earning doctoral degrees from even non-pontifical institutions.

Colors of doctoral birettas

The color of the doctoral biretta given by ecclesiastical universities and faculties is normally black, with colored piping corresponding to the faculty of study in which the degree was granted:

  • Theology (S.T.D., D.Min.): Red
  • Canon Law (J.C.D.): Green
  • Philosophy (Ph.D.): Blue
  • Social Sciences (H.E.D., S.I.C.D, etc.): Orange

At one time, different universities had different practices concerning the color and style of the biretta itself. One author, nearly a century ago, reports that in his day the Roman universities gave a doctoral biretta in black silk,[citation needed] Louvain gave a biretta with a colored tuft according to the academic discipline in which the doctorate was awarded,[citation needed] and the Catholic University of America gave a velvet biretta with red tuft and trim to doctors of theology.[9][10] The 'traditional' biretta at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum, is white, to correspond to the white Dominican habit.[11] Also, the academic senate of the Angelicum in its May 2011 meeting indicated that the black biretta may be used with trim and pom in the color of the particular faculty.[12]

A three-peaked black biretta with appropriately colored piping may be similarly used by those receiving the licentiate degree (S.T.L., Ph.L.).[citation needed]

Depictions in art in Catholicism

The doctoral biretta is sometimes seen in depictions of St. Teresa of Ávila, because she was declared a doctor by the University of Salamanca.[13] This recognition is distinct from her status as a Doctor of the Church. The doctoral biretta has been borrowed for depictions of another doctor of the Church, St. Thérèse de Lisieux.[14]

Use by women

The biretta was considered as possible headwear for female barristers in England and Wales. In 1922, immediately prior to the first lady being called to the Bar, there was discussion among the senior judges about what she should wear on her head. Darling J and Horridge J suggested the biretta, but were outvoted by the other nine judges present. As a result, female barristers wear the same unpowdered men's wig as male barristers, which completely covers the hair.[citation needed]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Biretta Definitions
  2. ^ Herbert Norris, Church Vestments: Their Origin and Development, 1950, 161.
  3. ^ Ritus servandus in celebratione Missae, II.2 and XII.6
  4. ^ Thurston, Herbert (1907). "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Biretta". Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 9 August 2018.
  5. ^ Herbert Thurston (1913). "Biretta" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  6. ^ Olmert, Michael (1996). Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella: Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.178. Simon & Schuster, New York. ISBN 0-684-80164-7.
  7. ^ John Abel Nainfa, Costume of Prelates of The Catholic Church: According To Roman Etiquette, 164.
  8. ^ Codex Iuris Canonici, 1917, can. 1378; Commentarium Textus Codicis Iuris Canonici, 1923, comm. 262: Commentarium Codicis Iuris Canonici, 1922, Liber III, Pars IV, Tit. XXII, 262
  9. ^ John Abel Nainfa, S.S., Costume of Prelates of the Catholic Church: According to Roman Etiquette (Baltimore: John Murphy Company, rev. ed. 1926).
  10. ^ Codex Iuris Canonici, 1917, can. 1378, and Commentarium Textus Codicis Iuris Canonici, 1923, comm. 262, p. 320: "biretum doctorale, (idest: cum quatuor apicibus) utpote insigne huius gradus ac diverso colore ornatum pro Facultate".
  11. ^ papabear (26 April 2008). "Accessed 3-25-2011". Cantate-domino.blogspot.com. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  12. ^ . Pust.it. 15 June 2011. Archived from the original on 28 July 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  13. ^ Paul Rhetts, Saint Teresa in New Mexico 10 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine. Tradicion Revista, Volume 7, No. 1, Spring 2002. Accessed 2006-11-26.
  14. ^ Portraits/Chicago Inc. Accessed 2006-11-26.

Bibliography

  • Noonan, James-Charles, Jr. (1996). The Church Visible: The Ceremonial Life and Protocol of the Roman Catholic Church. Viking. ISBN 0-670-86745-4.
  • Philippi, Dieter (2009). Sammlung Philippi - Kopfbedeckungen in Glaube, Religion und Spiritualität. Leipzig: St. Benno Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7462-2800-6.
  • Phillips, Walter Alison (1911). "Biretta" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). pp. 980–981.
  • "Instruction on the dress, titles and coat-of-arms of cardinals, bishops and lesser prelates". L'Osservatore Romano, English ed. 17 April 1969: 4.

External links

  • (in German) Pictures of birettas, information and literature
  • Additional pictures of Spanish bonete

biretta, firearms, manufacturer, beretta, biretta, latin, biretum, birretum, square, with, three, four, peaks, horns, sometimes, surmounted, tuft, traditionally, three, peaked, biretta, worn, catholic, clergy, some, anglican, lutheran, clergy, four, peaked, bi. For the firearms manufacturer see Beretta The biretta Latin biretum birretum is a square cap with three or four peaks or horns sometimes surmounted by a tuft Traditionally the three peaked biretta is worn by Catholic clergy and some Anglican and Lutheran clergy A four peaked biretta is worn as academic dress but not liturgically by those holding a doctoral degree from a pontifical faculty or pontifical university or faculty Occasionally the biretta is worn by advocates in law courts for instance the advocates in the Channel Islands 1 A traditional black biretta Contents 1 Origins 2 Liturgical biretta 2 1 Catholic use 2 1 1 Appearance 2 2 Use by Anglicans 3 Academic biretta 3 1 Doctoral degrees 3 1 1 Use in medieval universities 3 1 2 Use by pontifical universities 3 1 3 Colors of doctoral birettas 3 1 4 Depictions in art in Catholicism 3 2 Use by women 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Bibliography 7 External linksOrigins Edit The Spanish version of the biretta from the Philippi Collection The origins of the biretta are uncertain It is mentioned as early as the tenth century One possible origin is the academic cap of the high Middle Ages which was soft and square This is also the ancestor of the modern mortarboard used today in secular universities The biretta seems to have become a more widely used as an ecclesiastical vestment after the synod of Bergamo 1311 ordered the clergy to wear the bireta on their heads after the manner of laymen 2 The tuft or pom sometimes seen on the biretta was added later the earliest forms of the biretta the cap did not bear the device Liturgical biretta EditCatholic use Edit The biretta may be used by all ranks of the Latin Church clergy including cardinals and other bishops to priests deacons and even seminarians who are not clergy since they are not ordained Those worn by cardinals are scarlet red and made of silk After the Second Vatican Council the ceremony of giving the galero to cardinals was replaced with giving the biretta The biretta of a bishop is amaranth in color while those worn by priests deacons and seminarians are black The pope does not make use of the biretta The Tridentine Roman Missal rubrics on low Mass require the priest to wear the biretta while proceeding to the altar to hand it to the server on arrival and to resume it when leaving 3 At solemn Mass the sacred ministers wear it also when seated 4 Appearance Edit Cardinals bear no tuft or pom they are given their birettas and zucchettos by the Pope who elevated them in a ceremony named a consistory they will form a line and kneel before him when receiving them bishops bear a purple pom priests who have been appointed as prelates to certain positions within the Vatican wear a black biretta with red pom diocesan priests and deacons wear a black biretta with or without a black pom It is often asserted that seminarians are only entitled to wear a biretta without a pom pom but there would seem to be no formal ruling on this point Priests in monastic and mendicant religious orders that have their own habits Benedictines Franciscans Dominicans etc do not generally wear birettas in most circumstances even liturgical the monastic hood took the place of the biretta Canons Regular generally do for instance the canons of the Order of Premontre wear a white biretta Clerks Regular that is post Renaissance religious orders primarily dedicated to priestly ministry for instance the Jesuits and Redemptorists generally wear a black biretta with no tuft Other priests who belong to various forms of community life as the Congregation of the Oratory of St Philip Neri for instance generally also wear birettas but without a pom The Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest uses black birettas with a blue pom The liturgical biretta has three peaks four peaks however are the norm in Germany and the Netherlands with the peak less corner worn on the left side of the head According to the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia It was formerly the rule that a priest should always wear it in giving absolution in confession and it is probable that the ancient usage which requires an English judge assume the black cap in pronouncing sentence of death is of identical origin 5 The use of the biretta has not been abolished as a result of changes in the regulation of clerical dress and vesture following the Second Vatican Council and still remains the correct liturgical headgear for those in Holy Orders whilst in choir but its use has been made optional Its use is prevalent among bishops and cardinals and less so among other clergy Some priests wear it during outdoor services such as burials or processions and as is intended during the celebration of Mass and other liturgical services The biretta is also worn by a priest deacon subdeacon and bishop in attendance at a Mass offered according to the rubrics for the Roman Missal of 1962 Cardinal Angelo Scola wearing a scarlet watered silk biretta Then Archbishop Willem Jacobus Eijk Utrecht wearing an amaranth biretta The Biretta of a Monsignor Saint Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo wearing the black biretta of a priest in a mid 19th century paintingUse by Anglicans Edit Birettas are also occasionally worn by Anglo Catholic Anglican clergy though it is generally considered a Romanism Canons and deans could wear a black biretta with a red pom The Canterbury cap which like the biretta evolved from the medieval cap although seldom used since the early 20th century has been considered a more authentically Anglican alternative to the biretta The Canterbury cap has a soft square top rather than the rigid horns that developed on the biretta Academic biretta Edit Spanish rector college president in full academic dress wearing the round birrete biretta that is the academic cap in Spanish universities Doctoral degrees Edit Use in medieval universities Edit In the medieval university the ceremony by which a new master or doctor received his degree included the birretatio or imposition of the biretta This was often given with a token book in recognition of the person s scholarship 6 The academic biretta developed into various styles of academic headgear on the European continent and in the British Isles Today some secular universities still use the term if not the actual biretta to name their academic cap Use by pontifical universities EditFor those holding doctoral degrees from a pontifical university or faculty whether ordained or lay the principal mark of a Doctor s dignity is the four horned biretta 7 In commencement ceremonies and other academic settings doctors of the four ecclesiastical disciplines Philosophy Theology Canon Law and Sacred Scriptures from pontifical faculties and universities have a canonical right to wear the doctoral biretta as stated in the Codex Iuris Canonici 1917 can 1378 and explained in commentary 262 of the Commentarium Codicis Iuris Canonici as follows 262 Doctoratus ac Scentiae effectus canonici sic recensentur can 1378 doctoribus seu gradum academicum in una ex quatuor supradictis facultatibus lt lt vide 261 philosophia theologia ius canonicum Sacra Scriptura gt gt supremum obtinentibus rite creatis seu promotis regulariter post examen iuxta statuta a Sede Apostolica probata can 1376 2 saltem quoad usum validum facultatis ab eadem Aplca Sede concessae can 1377 1 deferendi extra sacras functiones quarum nomine ad hunc eflectum non venit ex usu sacra praedicatio nisi aliunde amplietur eis hoc ius quoad a annulum etiam cum gemma ipsis a iure huius canonis concessum can 136 2 b et biretum doctorale idest cum quatuor apicibus utpote insigne huius gradus ac diverso colore ornatum pro Facultate 8 The sections concerning the 1917 edition of Canon Law in relation to the academic biretta were abrogated by the updated edition in the 1983 Code of Canon Law Nevertheless the use of the academic biretta has continued to this day despite official recognition in the 1983 Code on the grounds that the new code did not intend to suppress its use but simply to divest itself of concern for academic regalia Moreover as it became socially acceptable for Catholic priests to study for post ordination degrees at Protestant seminaries or secular universities the four horned academic biretta with appropriately colored piping has similarly been employed by such priests earning doctoral degrees from even non pontifical institutions Colors of doctoral birettas Edit The color of the doctoral biretta given by ecclesiastical universities and faculties is normally black with colored piping corresponding to the faculty of study in which the degree was granted Theology S T D D Min Red Canon Law J C D Green Philosophy Ph D Blue Social Sciences H E D S I C D etc OrangeAt one time different universities had different practices concerning the color and style of the biretta itself One author nearly a century ago reports that in his day the Roman universities gave a doctoral biretta in black silk citation needed Louvain gave a biretta with a colored tuft according to the academic discipline in which the doctorate was awarded citation needed and the Catholic University of America gave a velvet biretta with red tuft and trim to doctors of theology 9 10 The traditional biretta at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas Angelicum is white to correspond to the white Dominican habit 11 Also the academic senate of the Angelicum in its May 2011 meeting indicated that the black biretta may be used with trim and pom in the color of the particular faculty 12 A three peaked black biretta with appropriately colored piping may be similarly used by those receiving the licentiate degree S T L Ph L citation needed Depictions in art in Catholicism Edit The doctoral biretta is sometimes seen in depictions of St Teresa of Avila because she was declared a doctor by the University of Salamanca 13 This recognition is distinct from her status as a Doctor of the Church The doctoral biretta has been borrowed for depictions of another doctor of the Church St Therese de Lisieux 14 Use by women Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2011 The biretta was considered as possible headwear for female barristers in England and Wales In 1922 immediately prior to the first lady being called to the Bar there was discussion among the senior judges about what she should wear on her head Darling J and Horridge J suggested the biretta but were outvoted by the other nine judges present As a result female barristers wear the same unpowdered men s wig as male barristers which completely covers the hair citation needed See also EditThe Philippi Collection Roman Catholic term Cappello Romano Galero Zucchetto Four Winds hat SkufiaNotes and references Edit Biretta Definitions Herbert Norris Church Vestments Their Origin and Development 1950 161 Ritus servandus in celebratione Missae II 2 and XII 6 Thurston Herbert 1907 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Biretta Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 9 August 2018 Herbert Thurston 1913 Biretta In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Olmert Michael 1996 Milton s Teeth and Ovid s Umbrella Curiouser amp Curiouser Adventures in History p 178 Simon amp Schuster New York ISBN 0 684 80164 7 John Abel Nainfa Costume of Prelates of The Catholic Church According To Roman Etiquette 164 Codex Iuris Canonici 1917 can 1378 Commentarium Textus Codicis Iuris Canonici 1923 comm 262 Commentarium Codicis Iuris Canonici 1922 Liber III Pars IV Tit XXII 262 John Abel Nainfa S S Costume of Prelates of the Catholic Church According to Roman Etiquette Baltimore John Murphy Company rev ed 1926 Codex Iuris Canonici 1917 can 1378 and Commentarium Textus Codicis Iuris Canonici 1923 comm 262 p 320 biretum doctorale idest cum quatuor apicibus utpote insigne huius gradus ac diverso colore ornatum pro Facultate papabear 26 April 2008 Accessed 3 25 2011 Cantate domino blogspot com Retrieved 16 March 2013 Ring Biretta and Gown for Graduates Pust it 15 June 2011 Archived from the original on 28 July 2013 Retrieved 16 March 2013 Paul Rhetts Saint Teresa in New Mexico Archived 10 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine Tradicion Revista Volume 7 No 1 Spring 2002 Accessed 2006 11 26 Portraits Chicago Inc Accessed 2006 11 26 Bibliography EditNoonan James Charles Jr 1996 The Church Visible The Ceremonial Life and Protocol of the Roman Catholic Church Viking ISBN 0 670 86745 4 Philippi Dieter 2009 Sammlung Philippi Kopfbedeckungen in Glaube Religion und Spiritualitat Leipzig St Benno Verlag ISBN 978 3 7462 2800 6 Phillips Walter Alison 1911 Biretta Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed pp 980 981 Instruction on the dress titles and coat of arms of cardinals bishops and lesser prelates L Osservatore Romano English ed 17 April 1969 4 External links Edit Look up biretta in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Birettas in German Pictures of birettas information and literature Additional pictures of Spanish bonete Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Biretta amp oldid 1128087403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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